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Endnote 2 - The Testimonium
Endnote 1 - The Testimonium
Endnote 5 - Tracking The Law in The Mishnah and in a Qumran Text
Endnote 4 - Tracking The Law in The Mishnah and in a Qumran Text
Endnote 3 - Tracking The Law in The Mishnah and in a Qumran Text
Endnote 2 - Tracking The Law in The Mishnah and in a Qumran Text
The meaning of this obscure term has been debated at length. Philip Blackman (Mishnayoth, vol. 6: Order Taharoth [Gateshead, UK: Judaica Press, 2nd ed. 1977], p. 771) lists the following suggested interpretations: Jesus ben Sira, ben Laanah, the author of the Book of Tagla, Homer, or the apostate, heretic.
Endnote 1 - Tracking The Law in The Mishnah and in a Qumran Text
Endnote 7 - How a Sung Sermon Works
Endnote 6 - How a Sung Sermon Works
Maas and Trypanis, Sancti Romani Melodi Cantica: Cantica Dubia (Berlin deGruyter, 1970), p. x; this edition presents the Greek texts of and brief English comments on 29 “doubtful” or clearly spurious works. Grosdidier de Matons, Romanos le Mélode, also discusses the hagiographic kontakia, pp. 217–245.
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